Example sentences of "[verb] through [adv] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Both sleep through Today on the radio .
2 I was walking through here to the office .
3 Mark Edwards , the ABA middleweight champion already in the Auckland squad , also won the vote of all three judges against Robert Buda , but the England captain Richie Woodhall got through only on a majority decision against his fellow Olympic bronze medal winner at light-middleweight .
4 In the 100 metres Allan got away to a fine start , I came through fast at the end , there was a photo-finish between us and he got the verdict .
5 Eventually Scott 's voice came through faintly on the line .
6 But it is not necessary to share Herbert Casson 's breathless enthusiasms , or to reach point-by-point agreement with his educational philosophy , to recognise the quite different moral emphasis that shows through repeatedly in the writings of pre-war youth workers and educationalists : an emphasis which saw youthful energy and also youthful misconduct as the spark of life , rather than the death-knell of the old traditions .
7 His attention to the style of his premiership shone through even at the age of ninety , twenty years after his departure from No. 10 , in a television interview with Ludovic Kennedy :
8 She held the door open as he shuffled through sideways with the bag , and then closed it behind him and led the way up the stairs .
9 And so to Nepal … we 're in the walled city of Bhaktapur … this is the place where many adaventures start from … the great climbing expeditions pass through here on the way to everest … we 're here for a sporting first … the first ever Kathmandu marathon
10 ‘ I was disappointed when a move to the club fell through earlier in the season because I believe my style would be suited to the English game .
11 all that , that they went through though over the years I mean , all , all he did
12 We shall pass through there to the city docks . ’
13 Fenniway crossed through again into the boarding annexe , and sent a message up by one of the constables helping the technicians on the stairs .
14 It 's a funny thing but every now and again she slips through here into the lounge and sits by the fire for a few minutes .
15 The pan-European influence comes through strongly in an office where French and British accents jostle with Italian ; where ‘ bonjour ’ and ‘ good morning ’ alternate with ‘ buongiorno ’ ; and where the next phone call is just as likely to come from Bradford , Paris or Barcelona as from Genoa .
16 Sentence ( 14 ) above can therefore be diagrammed in the following way : As for the presence of a before/after relation , the impression that comes through constantly with the use of to is that the infinitive event is depicted as a consequence or result of the action of helping .
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